Besides Budweiser beer and an arch which is closed, St. Louis has this ball club called the Cardinals.

From managers Red Schoendienst to Whitey Herzog to Tony La Russa, two in Cooperstown, the third on the way.

Men like George Kissell, Hub Kittle and George Sisler formed the college of Cardinals on the development side.

Homegrowns Albert Pujols (a 13th round pick), John Denny (29th) and Keith Hernandez (42nd) helped the Cards to post-season play over the years.

And don’t forget the scouting department, which has 17 homegrowns on the 25-man post-season roster, plus three on the disabled list.

Game 2 winner Michael Wacha may be the tip of iceberg, but the Cards also have starters Joe Kelly, Lance Lynn and Shelby Miller. Add in Jamie Garcia and John Gast and the Cards received 100 starts from their drafted players.

“We can save at the big-league level if we add starting pitching through the draft,” said scouting director Dan Kantrovitz on Sunday.

“Starting pitching is the most expensive commodity, so if we can draft pitchers it allows the organization to concentrate in other areas on the free agent market.”

Easier said that done: Scout only big-league starters.

“We put emphasis of drafting starters versus a guy who could become a seventh arm on a staff,” said Kantrovitz. “We try to mitigate and analyze injury risk. That sexy 98 m/ph fastball without command? It takes discipline to pass on that.”

St. Louis born-and-bred and fed on Ozzie Smith back flips, Kantrovitz was a 25th round draft choice of his hometown team in 2001. He worked in the Cards scouting department from 2004-2008, worked three years for the Oakland A’s and re-joined the Cards in 2012 as scouting director, replacing Jeff Luhnow, who became GM of the Houston Astros.

Day 1, well, his first day in the field, Kantrovitz, Mike Roberts and two other Cards scouts walked into Blue Bell Park at College Station, Tex. to see Wacha start the season opener against Illinois-Chicago, as he allowed one hit in 5 2/3 innings, walking three and striking out eight.

“We stayed on him, saw every start, had a number of scouts look at him, did our due diligence,” said Kantrovitz. “We couldn’t have dreamed he’d be there when we picked (19th).”

The Cards ignored a scouting myths myth.

“People thought his breaking ball might hurt his chances to start,” Kantrovitz said. “He had two-plus pitches: A fastball and a change. It’s rare to see that profile. Most guys have a plus fastball, plus curve.”

Ralph Garr, Jr. was the area scout who was on Wacha.

“To Ralph’s credit, he never once had any hesitancy about Michael’s projection, from Day 1 he said “he’s a horse, a starter,” Kantrovitz said. “People ask about the Cardinal culture. It’s sounds cheesy but it’s our fan base. They have such high expectations. We’re a small town and put 45,000 people in that park almost every night.”

Kantrovitz hired Charles Peterson, from the Major League Scouting Bureau, to scout Canada prior to last June’s draft, saying “Charles gave us an instant footprint in Canada, which we hadn’t had before, you don’t often see that many high-profile kids coming out of Canada.”

All didn’t sign, but the Cards landed Mississauga infielder Malik Collymore in the 10th round.

Carson Kelly, who spent 2006-07 playing for the Markham Mariners, is in the system. The Portland, Ore., native went undrafted on Day 1 of 2012 draft going to sleep thinking he’d attend University of Oregon. The next day the Cards drafted him and gave him a $2.4 million bonus. Kelly has hit 15 homers in his first season and a half of pro ball.

“His maturity level and leadership are off the charts, he’s one of the unique kids you will come across,” said Kantrovitz.

Cards scouts like Joe Rigoli and Roger Smith don’t need extra motivation but it’s a source of pride they have so many drafted players on the roster.

“Our guys enjoy going to scout an amateur game, then going to a restaurant and seeing one of their guys on the TV,” said Kantrovitz.

“I spoke to Wacha’s parents coming out of the clubhouse Saturday. They were so proud. We’re proud of Michael Wacha.”